My
delightful treks to the terrace
They are choosy.They prefer potato chips. They
cannot bear the sight of vegetables. They adore
chappathis but sulkingly accept rice when there is no choice.
Fortunately, they still prefer water to quench their thirst and do not demand
Pepsi or Coke. But they have transformed my mornings into delightful
adventures. I cherish the moment when they sweep in from nowhere to take a sip
at the fresh water I fill in the basin at my terrace every morning. I am
referring to the aerial guests who visit my terrace every morning to partake of
the little rice and water I serve them on the parapet walls.
There was a program on Pothigai channel which spoke
about the thousands and thousands of parrots visiting a house at Triplicane. It
was an extraordinary sight to see the green parrots flocking the terrace to eat
the rice served there for them. I could not but admire the meticulous care the
photographer at Triplicane took to cook huge quantities of rice daily to feed
the parrots. The picture of the parrots feeding on the rice kept swirling in my
mind and I wanted also to feed the birds in a small way. The photographer said that
it was the Tsunami which brought about this turn of events. For me it was the
unprecedented rains in December last.
For every new announcement about the impending rain
I used to climb the stairs to my terrace and personally verify the state of
affairs on the sky. Every weather bulletin on the TV was followed by my own
special bulletin based on my study of the sky and the hovering clouds. I can
still remember the day the sky turned totally blue and the terrace flooded with
bright sunlight. I could not contain my happiness to see that at last it had
decided to stop raining. I was basking in the newfound sunlight and suddenly
discovered what a wonderful place our terrace was! I wanted to celebrate this
joy of having a spacious terrace which I
had hitherto used only to dry all the clothes that had got drenched by the
flood waters which by habit entered my house every other day during this rainy
season.
And I started celebrating my terrace by serving food to the birds. The
first few days were not so eventful. I used to go first, serve the food and
quietly return to the ground floor to continue with my cooking. It was my
husband who after a few minutes went noiselessly to the terrace and peeped out of
the window to see if any bird had come to eat the rice. He used to return with
glee on his face and inform me that not a morsel of food was left behind!!I was
happy to hear it ,but became irrevocably sad because I missed the opportunity
to see the birds actually feed. I did
not have time to wait for the birds at the terrace because I had other morning
duties clamouring for attention. As it is, since I retired from service I
seemed to have invented the knack of stretching my work till time on end
invariably leading my hungry husband to fret and fume for his morning bread
which became available not until mid day.
I exchanged notes with others in a vain pursuit of
identifying the causes /reasons for the strange way in which my morning duties
expanded beyond the available time on a daily basis. When I was in service the
cooking used to be over by 7.55 am giving me enough time to refresh myself and
get ready to jump into the standing auto to speed to the college. (Cooking got
over at 7.55 am? Not always, I hear my husband mumble.)Sometimes I let the
sambaar boil for a few more minutes and so requested my husband to switch off
the gas stove after five minutes. Exactly after five minutes, I used to remind
him as I got into the auto to leave for MOP. If it were not the sambhaar it was
the vegetable in the kadai that required to spend some more time on the stove to become edible!
My husband had a strange feeling that he did half
the cooking daily to help me reach college on time. By cooking, he just meant
turning off the stove after five minutes. Very rarely he remembered to do that
small task I had entrusted to him and every day as soon as I reached the
college after 15 minutes I had to remind him about the 5-minute deadline. Initially
he was such a simple sincere person that he used to declare apologetically how
he had forgotten about the five-minute deadline and would rush to turn off the
stove. Of course, he bore the brunt of his forgetfulness. Many a day it was a
tryst with a ladle full of semisolid called sambar. But over a period of time he learnt to become
smart and left no tell-tale signs of his morning kitchen adventures. There was
no left over at all in the evening. I could not pursue my investigative sessions
about food spoilt because of negligence. Though I found it hard to believe that
my cooking was so impeccable that it got over in the morning itself, I dared
not ask my husband any probing questions because I preferred to believe that I was
such a great cook!
Because I had no necessity to punch in at 8-30 am I
seemed to have developed what may be called as the aaraam se attitude to household chores .Or was it the perfectionist
in me who finds new chores daily to make my home a cleaner place to live in? I have
no domestic help and the only person I have hired is a woman to sweep the
garden clean. When there was no necessity for it at all, suddenly I found
myself encroaching into her territory also. I organized a thulasi maadam near
the well and categorically told her that I shall sweep the entire space around
the thulasi maadam in the morning before
I decorate the front yard with kolams. She magnanimously agreed to this idea. Instead
,please sweep the new staircase alone, I had pleaded with her which request she
chose to ignore very often. That is how I manage to end up with my hands full
always.
Coming back to my treks to the terrace , I decided
that no one had the right to rob me of the pleasure of watching the birds feed
on the mini riceballs I serve daily. So I kept shifting the time from 6-30 am
to 8-30 am to exactly identify when there was more traffic of birds so that I
can see them have food. And it happened soon. They preferred it at 6-45 am. ( While
conducting this experiment, unintentionally I had got delayed the morning meal
time by a few more minutes roughly around sixty-five minutes. But because my
husband had agreed that it was mandatory to do such mini experiments to find
out great truths about the eating habits of winged visitors, he did not seem to
mind this slight variation in his meal time!)
Crows. koels, pigeons. squirrels, mynahs, seven
sisters all of them arrived in a phased
manner and partook of the food. It was such a pleasure to watch how each bird
gave space and time to others and how peacefully all of them had their daily
share without any turmoil!And the squirrels were the most exciting to watch. They
always pretended that they came to the terrace just like that and not exactly
to have food! The minute they came anywhere near the riceball they just picked
it up and jumped to the nearest coconut palm and had their meal aaram se
without any disturbance!
As soon as summer arrived I started keeping a basin
full of cold water. Meanwhile , the perfectionist in me woke up again and
admonished me for letting the terrace be strewn with leaves and baby coconuts
and flowers when I was serving food for my aerial guests. So before refilling
the water basin and serving food daily I started sweeping the terrace clean. It
was strange to see the crows hurriedly assembling on the parapet wall the
minute I opened the door leading to the terrace. They were impatient for the
water. They were particular that I emptied the basin of left over water,
cleaned it and then filled it with fresh water. By no means would they touch
the used water!!They were impatient for the water but preferred to wait till I
finished the cleaning operation! This latest cleaning operation of mine has
successfully delayed our brunch time by another 45 minutes! I am just now
wondering why I should not segregate the
brunch into the legitimate breakfast and proper lunch by cooking two different
meals! Is that the right strategy to provide my good husband with his morning
meals in the morning itself?